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8 Ways to Build Your Professional Reputation

Hannah Morgan, U.S. News & World ReportIf you aren’t bringing the best version of yourself to work every day, you’re playing a game of self-defeat. In short, you can up your game by doing eight things, writes Hannah Morgan:Master your role.Champion a special project.Suggest improvements.Advocate for others.Contribute to online communities.Always do the right thing.Over prepare for everything you do.Treat others kindly. Click for article

RENKES SHARES LAUGHS, BEST ADVICE IN FLORIDA WITH PEI YOUNG EXECS

By Kristen Wright, Managing Editor PEI Executive Vice President Robert “Bob” Renkes on Feb. 9 delivered during the PEI Young Executives Winter Conference in St. Augustine his final presentation before his May retirement.Renkes summarized the state of the industry, his career climb and his best advice to the industry’s next leaders.Back in My DayRenkes described himself as a “campus radical” who ran for student body president in college and won on his promise to secure refrigeration in dorm rooms. He said he went to law school and wrote a paper that one of his professors later included in a book. A few years afterward when Renkes interviewed for a job with then-PEI Executive Vice President Howard Upton, Upton pulled the book from his shelf and asked Renkes if that was him.Renkes first had credited the book and his being the cheapest candidate for his hiring at PEI. But later, Renkes said, he discovered Upton had sent some notes Renkes had scrawled during their interview to a forensic handwriting analyst for delving into his psyche. The handwriting analyst was the grandmother of PEI Young Executive member Loren Semler. During the PEI Young Executives Winter Conference, Renkes presented Semler with his grandmother’s analysis.The Industry“I think the economy is good,” Renkes said.He said wide opportunities exist in South America, the Far East and Europe, and PEI members are increasing sales by marketing internationally. Twenty percent of PEI membership is outside the U.S.Renkes mentioned gasoline prices, postponing the EMV deadline and the Department of Energy’s Co-Optima initiative that simultaneously will boost the efficiency of combustion engines and their fuels.“Alternative fuels will be big for PEI guys,” Renkes said.He predicted electric vehicle penetration might reach 3 percent by 2030.“I don’t know how PEI guys would participate in electric,” Renkes said. “I haven’t figured that out yet. Down the road, I think the industry can take 3 percent and you guys won’t be that affected.”He also mentioned that PEI loses about 120 member companies a year, most of which are related to mergers and acquisitions or failures.The big guys don’t want to buy the really little guys because they cost the same in due diligence as buying the bigger guys, he said.“What we are seeing is the middle guys combining,” he said.Renkes said he thinks that will continue.“Small distributors are light on their feet,” he said.He doesn’t see them disappearing.“Everyone’s happy with their service,” Renkes said. “They are making money.”That’s great for PEI because most PEI members are small, Renkes said. Two-thirds of PEI members do under $3 million in annual revenue.“Who are we losing?” Renkes said. “The little distributors because they are making these eight mistakes.” Didn’t know costs.Cared more about the top line than the bottom line.Employees checked out.Owner burnout.Too many relatives on payroll.Inadequate cash reserves/access to capital.Over-reliance on one customer.Illness/incapacity/death of owner.PEI Young Executives thanked Renkes for his support over the years by presenting him with a signed baseball bat.His reviews at the conference were excellent.

The Service Tech Shortage Reason No One Talks About

"From work to income to health to social mobility, the year 2000 marked the beginning of what has become a distressing era for the United States," writes Nicholas N. Eberstadt in Commentary.Eberstadt ties economics, the coastal political bubbles, escalating opiate abuse and an enabling welfare state to an emerging, disengaged American working class ... the very demographic that typically has filled service technician roles. Click for article 

HOW DISRUPTING SUCCESSION NORMS GETS THE RIGHT EXECS

Jake Appelman, Emily Livorsi and Lauren Ramsay, FMIHow to break out of the traditional leader selection mentality and use a more strategic approach to building future bench strength.Jim Collins famously wrote, “The first most important decisions are people decisions. The corporate leaders we studied who ignited transitions from good to great practiced the discipline of “First Who”: First get the right people on the bus, the wrong people off the bus, and the right people into the right seats, and then figure out where to drive the bus. (Until) you have 90 percent to 100 percent of your seats filled with the right people, there is no more important priority.” Although Collins’ principles hold true, they often fail to survive the realities of the engineering and construction (E&C) industry — an industry frequently understaffed and underskilled in human resources and talent development. It is also an industry in which leaders tend to make selection decisions “from the gut” and where key people decisions often come from a single leader or small group who controls most of the equity. In a business that tends to weigh projects over organization building, great companies view leader selection with the same rigor and discipline as business decisions, like project go/no-go or the evaluation of a potential joint venture.The need to get the right people in the right seats might be one of the top challenges facing our industry’s executives. Internal factors such as pending retirements, new strategic initiatives and rapid growth, combined with external dynamics, often all demand infusion of talent into new or existing roles.“I’ll know the right person when I see him or her.” “I’m a great judge of character.” “I use my gut to make the best hires.” We often hear these phrases when leaders refer to their talent selection process. We all want to believe that we know what we need from people to make our businesses thrive — and we think we can use our intuition to make that determination — but even the best leaders are notoriously bad at predicting an individual’s success in a role and fit within the company’s culture.Let’s look at an example. Decision-making scientists asked engineers at two large organizations how they would rate their own performances. Nearly 40 percent of those surveyed suggested they were performing at the top 5 percent of their organizations. Humans are overly optimistic and overconfident about our abilities. This logic extends to selecting future leaders for our businesses.Selecting the right talent using gut instinct alone, on average, predicts 1 percent variability in future leader performance. That is next to nothing. Yet most leaders in the E&C industry rely exclusively on their intuition, limited data and minimally effective hiring tools to make leader selection decisions. This approach brings great risk in the form of promoting people before they are ready and losing talent because of perceptions of an unfair and biased selection process. Large, publicly traded companies often recover from these mistakes, but most companies in the E&C industry are closely held and have most of their value tied up in a handful of key people. To build a great and enduring future for the industry, this outdated model of leadership selection must be disrupted.A Flawed ApproachThe industry’s intuitive and reactive method for selecting leaders, coupled with an already thin bench of internal leaders to draw from and only a few people at the top making key leader decisions, is due for disruption for a few critical reasons:Selecting the wrong leader can be costly.Using the wrong tools to select leaders can expose your organization to legal risks.Using our own subconscious biases can make people decisions extremely difficult.The construction industry has made great strides in improving risk management from a financial and operations perspective. Nevertheless, methods and practices for leader selection remain outdated and put companies at risk.The financial and legal impact of bad selection processes. A single bad hire at the executive level can be costly for an organization on several fronts. For one, the wrong executive hire could cost anywhere from $240,000 to millions of dollars. This data will resonate with many executives who see the cost of putting the wrong project manager or superintendent on a job, and yet that same recognition often fails to inform the even more critical decision-making of executive selection. Although the exact cost of putting the wrong candidate into a strategic leadership role in your business is a function of several factors, several direct and indirect costs will come into play.The cost of a bad hire includes lost opportunities for the organization, poor performance or weakened customer relationship effects, as well as culture and morale disruptions. And the second-order effects, such as loss of confidence in the executives making leadership selection decisions and a feeling of “I can’t get ahead” because of bias toward favored employees or family members, can be even more damaging. These issues might generate greater damage than the more commonly discussed costs associated with recruitment, including the executive’s compensation, severance pay and the cost of hiring a replacement.Leadership selection is a deeply personal, even emotional process that brings out all the devils of subconscious bias and perception unmoored in fact — all wrapped in the pressures of high-risk decisions that can affect a company for years. With this is mind, a rigorous and objective process is not only recommended; it is required.Biases get in the way. As leaders, we would like to think we are unbiased in our decisions, that we weigh information fairly and that we make rational decisions about people. We are all subject to biases. Our brains are great at devising shortcuts and creating rules about how the world operates and how people operate in it.If you doubt this, consider how many times you have heard, “I just had a bad feeling about that person,” or, “I knew they would be a star from the moment I met him or her.” Usually this serves us well. These mental shortcuts help us learn quickly and operate effectively in an environment that places an ever-increasing importance on our ability to think deeply and process information.But in the case of leader selection, our biases and mental shortcuts can backfire, leading to costly decisions. The following biases are especially relevant in our industry’s talent landscape and can interfere with the leader selection process.First come, first served. In an environment where great talent is hard to come by, we naturally are drawn to those candidates who are available, familiar and willing to take on the work in question. In most cases, those candidates who appear “next in line” or who apply first for the roles might not be the best fits — even if they seem like the obvious choices. This bias can get in the way of thinking more strategically about succession. Those with tenure and a history of technical and operational excellence (i.e., great project execution) often are considered first for key executive roles. Although these candidates might be perfect for the current phase of the business, they might be spectacularly unsuited to lead in an unpredictable and volatile future.Just clone me. In our industry, executive selection and succession often are managed by a narrow group of people, usually determined through ownership. This can result in a fallacy that those who are “like me” are the best fits for the business and roles. In this way, CEOs and hiring managers might have narrow views regarding the best fits for roles and often select people like themselves. This can be problematic. First, your current leader might overestimate his or her effectiveness in the role. Second, the future, strategic needs of the business might require a different approach and new set of competencies.If it’s not broke, don’t fix it. As businesses evolve, they move through somewhat predictable life cycles, each of which requires a different leadership style. For example, during the business’ startup period, leaders must be highly entrepreneurial, willing to take risks, hands-on and highly sales-oriented. But later life cycles require more of a systems builder, discipline and a process approach. For example, if a retiring CEO born into an entrepreneurial environment searches for someone just like himself, the results can stunt future organizational growth and health.Time is on our side. Leader selection is one of the most critical aspects of a transitioning leader’s legacy. The ultimate test of a successful leadership transition is when the next generation is ready to take the reins. Yet, we hear repetitively, “It’s not like I’m retiring next year.” The planning fallacy is the tendency to underestimate the time required to do something well. Transitioning someone into an executive role with sufficient time is critical because it 1) helps new leaders ensure they understand the role and expectations, and 2) gives new leaders a head start in the new role.A New ApproachLeaders can drive organizational success by using more effective practices in succession and selection. The following outlines key areas that FMI has identified through in-depth industry research and that are part of a broader approach to succession management (see Exhibit 1).Set the GroundworkStart early. It might seem premature, but effective succession planning begins five to 10 years before the actual transition happens. The processes for succession should always be in motion. In effective succession planning, for example, leader evaluation and talent reviews are consistent and part of the regular rhythm of the business. In this model, organizations have access to many data points on internal candidates and can bring various perspectives about a person’s fit for a new role. Using this model, you can identify future gaps that will need to be filled externally at some point and start networking and creating powerful recruitment strategies to find the right fit vs. the immediate fit.Clarify your ideology. Executive transition is emotional, deeply personal and challenging for people who are transitioning out of their businesses. Transitioning executives often wrestle with how to capture the essence of the organization and preserve its core as the organization grows, changes leadership, tackles new strategies and explores new markets. Crystallizing the soul of the organization can help clarify what type of leaders will fit with the culture.Establish your goals and strategies. Clarifying the organization’s near- and long-term goals helps executives better understand the competencies needed to capitalize on these strategies. For example, consider the company that’s moving from public markets and into private markets. The competencies relating to relationships, interpersonal influence and negotiation must change significantly. A leader who will execute on strategies related to team and talent development likely will need competencies in interpersonal sensitivity, motivation and inspiration, and mentoring and coaching others.Clarify Your RolesEstablish peak profiles. In our industry, leaders tend to overestimate the level of technical skills and background needed for a leadership role while underestimating the need for softer skills and competencies. Deficiencies on either side can derail a leader. FMI recommends defining the role requirements, technical skills, minimum qualifications and required competencies to succeed in the role. Role requirements define what you do, technical skills and minimum qualifications define what you need to know, and competencies are sets of behaviors that will define how you do it. Competencies play a critical role in leader assessment and selection and can help align talent with your organization’s strategic direction.Criteria for Great CompetenciesThey align with organizational values.They align with your vision for the future and your strategies for success.They differentiate average performers from star players.They should be concise and focused.Assess Your Pipeline and Evaluate CandidatesUse structured interviews. In most organizations in the E&C industry, interviews are a collection of arbitrary questions, including some personal favorites among hiring managers. Through a more rigorous, structured interview approach, companies can better predict future performance. In structured interviews, interviewers use an organized discussion guide that is tied closely to the job profile or a “peak profile.” The interview guide also includes recommendations for rating and scoring candidates. Using this method, selection specialists train interviewers to ask questions effectively and rate candidates objectively.Characteristics of a Structured InterviewInterview questions grounded in peak profiles measure skills and behaviors related to future job performance more accurately.Using this method makes the hiring process more legally defensible and reduces biases in decision-making.Interview questions tend to be more challenging compared with unstructured methods.Once developed, the interview guide becomes easy to use.Structured interviews also incorporate questions to assess a candidate’s alignment with the company’s core values.Add objective assessments. In addition to structured interviews, assessments that have been validated for the use of candidate selection (internally or externally) help remove biases and unveil blind spots or hidden strengths. When choosing the correct assessments, organizations can identify areas where their candidates align with the peak profiles and areas where candidates might fall short. Assessments also identify red flags that hiring managers might want to probe or explore in more depth during follow-up interviews. A selection specialist can ensure that the assessment tool chosen is valid and maps well to your peak profile.To be validated, assessments must be interpreted as being relevant to the job while reliably predicting future job performance. In addition, the organization’s selection assessments must not adversely affect protected groups such as women or racial and ethnic minorities. Assessments are being used more commonly to weed out ill-fitting candidates quickly and with less bias. Some of the more advanced assessment tools, such as Pinsight Leader Simulation, use online platforms to simulate an executive’s experience, assessing leader behaviors in real time and determining fit and readiness for executive roles. Drawing from the science of behavior and personality and insights from tools like Pinsight, selection specialists can provide readiness timelines, an assessment of future potential, cultural fit and alignment with the organization’s strategic goals.Examples of Valid Selection AssessmentsPinsight Leadership SimulationThe Hogan BatteryThe Watson-Glaser II Critical Thinking AppraisalGetting the Right People in the Right Seats: The Succession PriorityAs baby boomers rapidly retire and skilled, experienced labor becomes more difficult to find and retain, E&C firms must take a more strategic approach to identifying and selecting future leaders. Leadership selection decisions are the ultimate privilege and responsibility of senior executives.These choices shape an outgoing leader’s legacy more than any other business decision. That’s why these decisions are difficult and why any seasoned executive can tell many stories about the wins and losses in identifying the right leaders. A rigorous and objective process for selection never will fully ensure the right choice, but it greatly improves the chances of success.Examples of Assessments to Avoid for SelectionMyers-Brigg Type Indicator (MBTI)The DiSC Persobnality AssessmentEmotional Quotient Inventory (EQ-i)Disrupting the traditional selection model is not only a business imperative — it’s also the right thing to do.Reprinted with permission from FMI Corp. For more information, visit www.fminet.com.Jake Appelman is a principal with FMI’s Center for Strategic Leadership. He partners with architecture, engineering and contracting firms to build enduring organizations through exceptional leadership. Reach him at jappelman@fminet.com.Emily Livorsi, Ph.D., is a consultant with FMI’s Center for Strategic Leadership. She brings a solid understanding of leadership research and the latest talent development thinking to best serve a diverse group of firms in the construction industry. Reach her at elivorsi@fminet.com.Lauren Ramsay, Ph.D., is a consultant with FMI’s Center for Strategic Leadership. She brings deep expertise in organizational research and contributes to FMI talent management thought leadership to drive client success. Reach her at lramsay@fminet.com. 

5 Mentoring Tips for 2017

Dana Perino, former press secretary for President George W. Bush, writes that millennials can do five things in 2017 that will change their personal and professional lives:Perfect your poker face.Resist “up-talking” and apologizing.Make posture a priority.Leave your home office.Stretch and save your dollar.Click for article

Employee Engagement Myths You Need to Ditch Now

Jessica Brook, of Social Chorus, shares details about the following employee engagement myths:When it comes to employee engagement everybody wants the same thing.Employee engagement is not that important.HR owns employee engagement.Employee engagement is a trend.Employee engagement doesn’t affect employee loyalty.You need to put a lot of budget toward employee engagement to get results.Employee engagement takes time away from real work. Click for article

Small Business Taxes in 2017

As President-elect Donald Trump moves into the White House, the potential for volatility in the realm of tax policy is high. Here's what you need to know in 2017, according to Adam C. Uzialko of Business News Daily. Read on for details about:Deadline changesTax break extensionsSection 179Bonus depreciationWork opportunity tax creditR&D tax creditSocial security taxesPossible corporate tax rate changesPossible changes to the Affordable Care ActTax tips for small businessesClick for article

BLOCKING AND TACKLING — OBSOLETE CONCEPTS?

Albert D. Bates, Profit Planning GroupDuring the past few years, the emphasis in distribution has moved from improving operations to completely rethinking the nature of the business. New ideas have included dramatically reducing the number of customers served, using big data to gain a marketing advantage, structuring separate Web-based entities and using mobile technology to preempt competitors. Countless other strategic initiatives could be listed, too.Lost in the discussion is managing the existing business for greater profit. It is not that distributors lack desire to improve profitability, but the idea of improved performance from blocking and tackling better seems so 20th century.Examine the economic realities of improved operations from two perspectives:The economic impact of small improvements. How modest operational changes can lead to much higher profits.Guidelines for operational improvements. Opportunities for blocking and tackling better.The Economic Impact of Small ImprovementsFigure 1 examines income statement performance of a typical PEI member based on the latest DPR Report. As indicated in the “current results” column, the typical firm generates $8 million in revenue. It operates on a gross margin of 26.3 percent of sales with expenses of 23.3 percent of sales. As a result, it generates a pre-tax profit of $240,000, or 3 percent.Figure 1: Impact of 1 Percent Improvements for Typical PEI MemberIncome Statement ($)Current ResultsPotential ResultsPercent ChangeNet Sales8,000,0008,080,0001.0Cost of Goods Sold5,900,0005,937,7900.6Gross Margin2,100,0002,142,2102.0Payroll Expenses1,100,0001,089,000-1.0All Other Expenses760,000752,400-1.0Total Expenses1,860,0001,841,400-1.0 Profit Before Taxes240,000300,81025.3    Income Statement (%)   Net Sales100.0100.0 Cost of Goods Sold73.873.5 Gross Margin26.326.5 Payroll Expenses13.813.5 All Other Expenses9.59.3 Total Expenses23.322.8 Profit Before Taxes3.03.7 The “potential results” column reflects the impact of three modest, seemingly inconsequential improvements. The specific improvements are: 1) a 1 percent increase in sales; 2) a 1 percent improvement in the gross margin percentage from 26.3 percent to 26.5 percent (26.3 percent times 1.01); and 3) a 1 percent reduction in total expenses. It is blocking and tackling better personified.Although each improvement in operations is a modest 1 percent, the impact on profitability is far from modest. The firm’s pretax profit increases from 3 percent of revenue to 3.7 percent. More consequential, the dollar profit increases by $60,810 — a 25.3 percent improvement. This increase in profit provides a basis for financing the foray into more strategic actions.For years, I’ve repeated the mantra, “Little things mean a lot.” Admittedly, many distributors have tired of hearing the refrain. As a result, the idea of systematic improvements has lost favor. The profit impact of such improvements suggests it might be time for an operational renaissance.Guidelines for Operational ImprovementsIt is one thing to talk about operating the existing business more effectively. It is something else to actually do it. In essence, how does the firm block and tackle better? In making the improvements there are two important issues to consider—(1) focusing on what matters and (2) developing a consensus in the business as to what those item really are.Operational focus. Three areas of change drive the financial improvements in Figure 1: net sales, gross margin and expenses. Each must be addressed. In doing so, firms must avoid overcomplicating the improvement actions required. Emphasize focusing on a few key issues.Net sales. Research in distribution routinely indicates that many distributors are missing anywhere from 3 to 5 percent of their sales potential for one basic reason: They cut their inventory investment. The move in distribution to cut back on inventory began nearly a decade ago as firms began to take more financial views of their businesses. Inventory reduction continues despite research that shows the two main customer complaints about distributors are inadequate service and assortments that are too narrow.Gross margin. For most firms, a significant and largely untapped opportunity exists to improve the gross margin percentage. It involves identifying items where prices can be increased without affecting the firm’s competitive position. Such items, nearly all of which are slow-selling SKUs, represent a small proportion of sales volume. Yet they have the potential to contribute to a significant improvement in a firm’s overall gross margin percentage. Every pricing study has found a potential gross margin improvement that is at least three times as large as the improvement in Figure 1.Expenses. Most distribution managers are tired of hearing about expense control. The Great Recession and another eight years of tepid growth left most managers feeling that there is nothing left to cut. They might be right. The key to expense control is not to cut expenses or to become more productive. Expense control must emphasize internal order economics, a topic covered in previous articles. The battle is to get the maximum number of items on every order. If that can be done, expenses will fall systematically as a percent of sales, even as they continue to increase in dollars.Operational consensus. As distribution businesess increase in size and scope, they become more bureaucratic. Too often they move beyond bureaucratic to being balkanized. Recent research on lines of trade by the Distribution Performance Project unveiled a lack of consensus among managers regarding what’s important in improving performance. Half of managers think their firms should slash prices to gain sales volume. Meanwhile, the other half want to increase prices.It’s not just the sales folks who push to lower prices. Uncertainty about what to do afflicts every aspect of an operation. With such disparity of understanding, little chance remains to make improvements.Achieving goal congruence depends on management education. There is often a feeling that “they all know that” about the impacts of inventory reductions and other issues. But in reality, half of management doesn’t know.Education must provide a basic understanding of what drives a firm’s profit. Your goal isn’t to make everybody an accountant. But you must ensure all managers understand the economics of price cutting, for example.NextDistribution is amid significant change. Each firm must look for new strategic initiatives, new technology and new ways to service customers. If firms ignore the profit opportunities in the existing business, they severely limit their ability to participate in the new distribution future. The existing business is a massive profit improvement opportunity that must be optimized.Emphasize blocking and tackling better.Albert D. Bates, Ph.D., is the founder and director research of Profit Planning Group. He is the author of the newly released “Breaking Down the Profit Barriers in Distribution” available through Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

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